Sans Superellipse Wawy 2 is a very bold, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Arian', 'Eurostile Next', and 'Eurostile Next Paneuropean' by Linotype; 'Bi Bi' by Naghi Naghachian; and 'Eurostile SH' by Scangraphic Digital Type Collection (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: logos, headlines, posters, app ui, gaming, futuristic, techy, sporty, playful, industrial, impact, modernize, soften geometry, tech branding, ui display, rounded corners, squarish bowls, compact apertures, soft terminals, geometric.
A heavy, rounded-rectangle sans with broad proportions and softly squared curves throughout. Strokes are uniform and monolinear, with large, solid counters that often take on squarish, superelliptical shapes (notably in O/0 and D/P). Corners are consistently radiused, terminals tend to be blunt and clean, and diagonals (V/W/X/Y/Z) are sharply constructed but kept friendly by the rounded joins. Spacing reads sturdy and steady, producing dense, blocky word shapes that remain clear at display sizes.
Best suited to logos, headlines, and short bursts of text where its dense, geometric mass can carry impact. It also fits UI titles, in-game menus, tech packaging, sports graphics, and signage that benefits from bold, rounded forms and strong silhouette recognition.
The overall tone is confident and modern, blending a machine-made, sci‑fi cleanliness with a friendly softness from the rounded geometry. It feels energetic and action-oriented, suggesting technology interfaces, sports branding, and contemporary product aesthetics rather than editorial refinement.
The font appears designed to deliver maximum presence with a consistent superelliptical construction—combining industrial clarity with approachable rounded corners. Its goal is likely to create a contemporary, high-impact voice that reads as both engineered and friendly.
The design leans on squared counters and compact apertures, giving letters a robust, stamped look. Numerals follow the same rounded-rect logic, with 0 closely echoing the uppercase O and 2/3/5 showing streamlined, angular gestures softened by rounding.